Word: eggleston
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...episode in February 1993. However, the woman, now 29, did not take it to the Ethics Committee until July 19--partly because she wanted to protect her privacy and partly because she was skeptical about whether the panel would give it a fair hearing, explained her lawyer W. Neil Eggleston. Even then her complaint languished with the staff for weeks, until Aug. 3, the day after the Senate's 52-to-48 vote against holding public hearings on Packwood. Last week Ethics Committee chairman Mitch McConnell refused to elaborate on how the oversight occurred...
...Consulting has given a strong impression that you can go in quickly and make an impact," says York M. Eggleston IV '92, who worked for New York-based Booz Allen & Hamilton Inc. "There is the impression that this is where the smart people are. Hey, you can continue to get an education here...
...memorandum to the First Lady that sheds light on a central question of the Whitewater affair: What deep, dark secret would compel so many senior Administration officials to attempt intervention in a probe that should have been immune from politics? The memo, written by White House associate counsel Neil Eggleston, warned that the RTC could sue "the President and Mrs. Clinton" if Clinton's 1984 campaign "knowingly received diverted Madison assets" or if "the Clintons knowingly received other diverted Madison Guaranty assets through Whitewater...
Most likely, not a single White House official knows whether that happened. But just because it may be true, the Clintons' campaign-tested damage-control team swung into action in February. Even White House counsel Lloyd Cutler got into the act, withholding the Eggleston memo from lawmakers until last Monday night, releasing it only under pressure from Congress...
...Altman called Margaret Williams, Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff, and asked her to assemble a group of people quickly so he could inform them of his decision. At a meeting in Williams' office, Altman told Nussbaum, Ickes and Eggleston he would not recuse himself. Hanson arrived at the meeting late, after Altman left, and learned then of her boss's decision. Hanson recalled that Ickes asked her how many people were aware that she had advised Altman two days earlier to step aside. When Hanson replied that only three people knew, Hanson said, Ickes pronounced this good...